Random House’s newly updated Seussville website – featuring my biography and timeline – recently went live. This is the first time I’ve written a piece for a corporation, but Dr. Seuss did it all the time. Though he published his first children’s book in 1937, he made his living through advertising … until the bestselling The…
Category: Children’s Literature
Literature for Adolescents, Fall 2010
With the fall term imminent (starts Monday), I’m posting a link to the latest iteration of my English 545: Literature for Adolescents. My goal is always “diversity” in many senses of that word.  We read books by writers of different backgrounds (African-American, Iranian, Chinese-American, Latino, Caucasian), genders, sexualities, classes — which are probably the categories most…
It’s a Lane Smith Book
Comedy is hard. Lane Smith makes it look easy. I’m not going to reveal the punch line to his latest, It’s a Book, because I don’t have to: There are plenty of amusing moments along the way. When the jackass asks, “Where’s your mouse?” Smith provides a wordless page in which a mouse emerges from…
Green Eggs and Ham: A 50-Word Book Turns 50
Dr. Seuss‘s Green Eggs and Ham is one of the reasons I do this blog, write books, and am an English professor.  Nearly forty years ago, Green Eggs and Ham — which turns 50 this month — taught me to read.  It also taught me that reading is fun, helping to make me a life-long reader. The…
Crockett Johnson: A Quiet Man
A 1943 letter from Crockett Johnson. Asked about himself, he dodges the question.
Ruth Krauss, mind-reader?
Is it just me, or does “This is the lady who knows what children think — BEFORE THEY DO” sound like the tag line for a horror movie? Â You will be relieved to know that Ruth Krauss could not read children’s minds. But she was an excellent and sympathetic listener. In her earliest work, she…
He Was a Teen-age Harold: Crockett Johnson’s High School Cartoons
Two high-school cartoons by Crockett Johnson. Neither has been seen since the 1920s.
“Too Bad His Duck Is So Crazy”: Tim Egan, Seriously Funny
Tim Egan, seriously funny author-illustrator of picture books, deserves a prize. A big prize. In this post, I try to explain why.
Mash-up vs. Purple Crayon
Different kinds of scholars, different kinds of scholarship. But many paths to success in academia.
Cul de Sac = Classic
If you don’t already read Richard Thompson’s Cul de Sac, you really should. This is one of the comic strips that will, in the future, be regarded as classic. It’s that good.
